Police prosecutor Acting Senior Constable Balan Selvadurai said the victim, who was known to two of the defendants, had been called to Callide Cres for a lift when the men asked to borrow his phone.

He said the defendants then briefly headed inside Mr Veronese's home before returning and giving back the Samsung device.

But the victim quickly discovered his device's CommBank app had recently been opened and that two transactions, one of $800 and one of $10,000, had recently been made to an unfamiliar account.

A violent altercation soon followed leading to the arrest of the three teens and the hospitalisation of the alleged victim.

Once the victim escaped to the confines of his car, he sped off down the street while his attackers allegedly chased him on foot, whipping the same brick at the fleeing vehicle.

When police arrived, a crime scene was established and a dog squad quickly tracked the three youths allegedly responsible to an address about 400m from the scene of the attack.

The Crown made several allegations in its case to oppose bail. These included the following allegations: accused's clothing, which matched witness statements, Mr Skinner's fingerprints, which were found on the victim's damaged car, blood on a pair of shoes at Mr Veronese's home (also the scene of the offences), the swollen knuckles of both Mr Wilson and Mr Veronese and a phone with a picture of Mr Skinner's tattoo on it lying at the crime scene.

Noting Mr Wilson had a "propensity to act violently" given his extensive history, Magistrate Melanie Ho refused the teenager's bail.

Mr Skinner was refused bail too despite the court being told he had a witness alibi and was not known to the victim. All three accused will re-appear on March 19.